All-optical routing of single photons by a one-atom switch controlled by a single photon

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Abstract

The prospect of quantum networks, in which quantum information is carried by single photons in photonic circuits, has long been the driving force behind the effort to achieve all-optical routing of single photons.We realized a single-photon-activated switch capable of routing a photon from any of its two inputs to any of its two outputs. Our device is based on a single atom coupled to a fiber-coupled, chip-based microresonator. A single reflected control photon toggles the switch from high reflection (R ∼ 65%) to high transmission (T ∼ 90%), with an average of ∼1.5 control photons per switching event (∼3, including linear losses). No additional control fields are required.The control and target photons are both in-fiber and practically identical, making this scheme compatible with scalable architectures for quantum information processing.

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Shomroni, I., Rosenblum, S., Lovsky, Y., Bechler, O., Guendelman, G., & Dayan, B. (2014). All-optical routing of single photons by a one-atom switch controlled by a single photon. Science, 345(6199), 903–906. https://doi.org/10.1126/science.1254699

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